Baryon asymmetry refers to the observation that apparently there is matter in the Universe but not much antimatter. We don't see galaxies made of antimatter or observe gamma rays that would be produced if large chunks of antimatter would annihilate with matter. Hence at early times, when both were present, there must have been a little bit more matter than antimatter. This is quantified using the asymmetry parameter

$\eta = \frac{n_{baryon} - n_{antibaryon}}{n_{photon}}$

From cosmological measurements such as WMAP,

$\eta \approx (6 \pm 0.25) \times 10^{-10}$

However, the source of baryon asymmetry is said to be one of the Big Problems of Physics.

What is currently the state of the art regarding this puzzle? What's the best fit we can get from the Standard Model? What do we get from lattice simulations?

Just a side note - we cannot see galaxies made of antimatter because it interacts with light in the same way as ordinary matter (there is no antiphoton).
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Leos OndraApr 19 '12 at 21:43

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@LeosOndra The way we expect to see from the earth anti galaxies is by the distinctive lines in the gamma spectrum. These annihilations will be by the dust and clouds of antimatter surrounding such a galaxy, at the interface with the space surrounding a galaxy. The intergalactic region will be rife with annihilations of the dust and the particle clouds, which will have characteristic lines in the spectrum. These have not been detected.
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anna vApr 20 '12 at 6:27

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continued: If there were as many galaxies as anti galaxies, collisions would have a probability, and when colliding they would be a great source of distinctive gammas from annihilations. These have also not been detected. Had they been, we would have seen an antigalaxy, except maybe we would not be able to know which of the two colliding ones was the anti.
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anna vApr 20 '12 at 6:31

3 Answers
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To achieve a nonzero baryon asymmetry, one needs to satisfy the so-called Sakharov conditions:

Baryon $B$ violation

C-symmetry violation and CP-symmetry violation

Interactions out of thermal equilibrium

If at least one of these "asymmetries" or "imbalances" is missing, the total $B$ of the Universe will remain zero.

The Standard Model preserves $B$ perturbatively (the baryon number is an accidental symmetry preserved by the renormalizable interactions), so it violates the first condition. In fact, while it violates C and CP, the violation of CP via the CKM matrix is too weak so even the second condition fails. The typical processes described by the Standard Model tend to be close to thermal equilibrium as well but the failure of one condition is enough so we don't need to be too specific about the last claim I made. The conclusion is clear: One needs models beyond the Standard Model to create a baryon asymmetry. This much has been known for decades.

However, the Standard Model contains some kind of generalized instantons, the sphalerons, that may convert the lepton number $L$ to $B$ and vice versa. So the first condition, $B$ violation, may be replaced by a combination of SM sphalerons and $L$ violation.

That's why the models producing the baryon asymmetry may be either the traditional "baryogenesis" in which the baryon number is clearly violated, or "leptogenesis" in which the lepton number is violated and the lepton asymmetry is later converted to a baryon asymmetry as well. One may discuss various thermal and non-thermal versions of these processes within various theories beyond the Standard Model such as the grand unified theories. The grand unified theories are rather characteristic for the literature because the characteristic scale of the physical phenomena responsible for leptogenesis or baryogenesis is usually assumed to be close to the GUT scale, up to 15 orders of magnitude above the LHC energies.

The literature on leptogenesis and baryogenesis is comparably large. For example, both words appear 700+ times in the titles, see

I invite you to check some of these papers. There's of course no universally acceptable, unambiguously superior model of leptogenesis or baryogenesis at this moment because there's also no clearly preferred model beyond the Standard Model. Physicists just don't know what the right mechanism producing the baryon asymmetry is. However, the field is sufficiently advanced that newly proposed models of beyond-the-Standard-Model physics are routinely tested on whether or not they provide us with a viable mechanism for baryogenesis or leptogenesis.

A viable form of leptogenesis or baryogenesis is usually demanded together with a realistic enough implementation of cosmic inflation and with other cosmological constraints associated with high enough energy scales (e.g. the absence of the moduli problem etc.).

The only source of asymmetry in the Standard Model is from CP violation, and although there is CP violation in the Standard Model it is not large enough to account for the observed asymmetry. It's expected that the asymmetry will be explained by some extension to the standard model, but at the moment we don't know which, if any, of the suggested extensions is the culprit.

What $\eta$ do we get from the Standard Model using CP violation?
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mtrencseniApr 20 '12 at 10:15

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There are two problems with SM baryogenesis. First: the Higgs is too heavy for the electroweak phase transition to be violent enough (it needs to be first order for baryogenesis, but it's actually second order in SM) so baryogenesis doesn't even really get started. Second: even if you pretend the phase transition is strong enough, the CP violation is too small. Many orders of magnitude too small. Try arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/9312215 for example. So all studies of baryogenesis since have focused on beyond standard model physics.
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Michael BrownFeb 9 '13 at 0:53

Our Big Bang produced only matter. 2. Big Bangs can produce either only matter or only antimatter. 3. Many universes (only two will not do) were formed. One half of them contain only matter. The other half contains only antimatter. The formation of universes will continue. It has no known beginning nor a known end.